Edward Stuart Talbot ('Men of the Day. No. 1300. "Winton."')

1 portrait of Edward Stuart Talbot

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Edward Stuart Talbot ('Men of the Day. No. 1300. "Winton."')

by 'RAY'
chromolithograph, published in Vanity Fair 11 October 1911
14 1/8 in. x 9 1/2 in. (359 mm x 242 mm) paper size
Reference Collection
NPG D45631

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  • 'RAY' (active 1911), Cartoonist in Vanity Fair. Artist or producer of 9 portraits.

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Current affairs

Asquith's Liberal government introduces the Parliament Act to curb the powers of the House of Lords following the clash between the Commons and Lords over the 1909 People's Budget. The Act removed the Lords' power to veto bills, reduced the length of Parliament from seven to five years, and provided for the payment of MPs.

Art and science

Ernest Rutherford discovers the structure of the atom. The New Zealand born physicist working in Manchester showed with his Nuclear Model that electrons orbited a nucleus composed of protons and neutrons. The discovery paved the way for nuclear physics.

International

The Polish Chemist, Marie Curie, becomes the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for her discovery in 1898 of the radioactive element, Radon.
The Mona Lisa is stolen from the Louvre. The masterpiece was missing for two years, during which time suspicion fell on avant-garde poet Guillaume Apollinaire and his friend Pablo Picasso, before Vincenzo Peruggia, an employee of the Louvre, was arrested in Florence.

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Rowland Wateridge

14 October 2016, 14:17

The title "Winton" is an abbreviation of 'Wintoniensis', meaning 'of Winchester' and used as the official signature of the Bishop of Winchester.
Based on viewing the print in the 'Vanity Fair' archive, the bishop (who was successively Bishop of Southwark, Rochester and Winchester), is portrayed here when Bishop of Winchester wearing the robes of the Prelate of the Order of the Garter.